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Chicago examiner vol xiii no 143 a m monday Chicago june 7 1915 monday registered h s patent offica ddt/t hmc rcmt in Chicago and ex.skwhkke rkich ulnfc ltfn 1 suburbs t w " cesw 7 drown in summer day accidents 2 at picnic two bodies washed ashore while j six persons barely escape in â– tragedies on lake and rivers canoe upsets in the desplaines at river grove and two men at co { lumbian knights outing sink three others almost lose lives trying to save companion un able to swim in calumet river Chicago enjoyed its first summer sunday yesterday thousands of persons sought the cooling breezes of the uike shore parks and suburban woods automobiles congested the boule vards the highest temperature was ss degrees at ~> p >Â»â– 6 night how ever a stiff wind had arisen cod ing the atmosphere six persons were drowned in boat ing accidents yesterday another either purposely or accidentally was plunged into the water and drowned the body of a man believed to have been drowned saturday night was washed up on the lake shore an other body was taken from calumet river at wentvvorth avenue six persons escaped with their lives after a desperate struggle in the water there were four accidents in all two o them on the lake one on desplainc-s river and another on cal umet river the dead philip karl jk twenÂ«>-iour years old o east forty-third street albert qiilter twenty years old east fifty-fifth street and in diana avenue charles a.ixzel o:to south hording avenue vixcext zajicek address un known william fricke osr west liigrh teenth street joseph vax wester 2 west one hundred and eleventh place three hen nnidentified two drown off 13th street karl and quilter were drowned j when their boat capsized in the lake j off the foot of thirteenth street | adam rice 4147 lake park avenue j also in the boat swam halt a mile j through the waves and was dragged j up on shore exhausted we were headed for lincoln park said rice when the boat be | pan to ship water karl was running the motor so quilter and i began | bailing out the water we were pre ; paring to rope ourselves to the boat j when a big wave upset it and we were thrown out karl's body was recovered by cap tain carland's life-saving crew later but that of quilter could not be fouind zajicek and ajnzel were drowned in the same accident on the des plaines river near river grove the men were attending a picnic given by the columbian knights with an other man anil a youth they were paddling a canoe when the craft swung around sidewise to ihe current and was upset marshal rescued two benjamin tomlinson marshal of river grove who saw the accident leaped into the water and rescued the boy and one of the mem zajicek and ajnzel sank and did not appear again their bodies were caught in an un dertaker's net across the river at wil low springs later three companions of joseph van westen attempted to save him and almost drowned themselves when their boat upset in the calumet river near kensington all but van wes ten could swim he sank and was carried down stream by the current oscar berquist 29 west one hun dred and ninth street joseph gray and oscar carlson who were rowing with van westen dove after him re fc^v)eatedly until they became exhausted i their cries for help brought several other persons who manned boats and i picked up the three swimmers van body was not recovered ' flicks was attempting to step from a pier inthe lake at tho foot of four \ ttenth streot into i boat when he k o v t bis balance ant fell into tlie election is to=day judges to be chosen to-day not to-morrow is election day polls open at 6 o'clock a m and close at 4 o'clock p m the voters will elect twenty circuit judges for cook county two superior court judges and a member of the supreme bench for Illinois from the seventh district all male voters eligible may vote for the judicial candidates voters who have moved since last registra tion may swear in their votes with a householder as a witness women may vote on the bond issues u of i student at 23 starts to war as a captain less than a year ago dougal | anthony kittermaster was a fresh man at the university of Illinois this week he will sail as the youngest captain in the third cana dian contingent to fight the ger mans somewhere in p'rance he is twenty-three years old captain kittermaster is a son of w a kittermaster of glencoe who has lived there for fifteen years but never has given up his cana dian citizenship the elder kitter master sent his son to canadian military training schools and soon after the war started the boy was ordered to canada he was a lieu tenant then in drilling recruits he showed such ability that he soon was pro moted to a captaincy when he sails for france he will be in com | mand of 1,500 men better than x-ray he calls invention by international xewk service new york june 6 â€” a wonderful improvement on the x-ray is claimed by charles h stanley an electro-therapeutist of this city he calls his discovery the stanley ray and declares among other things it is much more efficacious in the treatment of cancer than radium it is claimed any obstruction in the body is made visible in greater de tail than with the x-ray and the surgeon is able to remove it while it is still in view marconi invents gun to destroy airships by international xe service rome june 6 â€” according to a re port guglielmo marconi who ar rived here this morning has invented an anti-aircraft electrical gun whose projectile when within the area in fluenced by dirigibles or the pro peller of an aeroplanes will follow in the wake of the airship smashing the propeller signor marconi refuses to confirm or deny the report â€¢ comedian villa is very ill ily international xelvs service milan june fi â€” eduardo ferra villa the noted italian comedian is very ill here boys held in plottorrid blackstone arrested when pawning silver brushes and safety razors they confess to the police young men who say they are of good families admit they planned to rob the hotel two young men of good families who started out to make their way about the world by burglary were caught by detective sergeants wild and malloy last night just in time to prevent a raid on the blackstone hotel the police say the youths confessed they had planned to rob at least five rooms there and later sev eral rooms in the hotel sherman the detectives saw the young men pawning silver brushes and safety razors in south state street and be i gan to question them they gave un satisfactory answers where do you live demanded wild at the blackstone ' quit kiddin now and tell the truth come and see our rooms invited the prisoners had room at 1 a day the detectives went and surely enough under the names of w m hayger and c f hayger they had a j room at 5 a day and had eaten spanish melons hothouse grapes and other delicacies for breakfast under questioning by the detectives j ihe youths broke down and confessed i they had stolen the brushes and ra zors in saginaw and had planned j wholesale robberies here my name isn't hayger said the ! older about twenty-two i am g l duncan son of dr banker b duncan of detroit but don't let him know i i'm in jail " and don't let my mother know i i'm a thief " pleaded the other | she's in huntington w va my j name is benjamin duncan we are | not related my home is in colum i bus ohio got tired going to church what made you leave home asked the detectives oh my father's a sour old scotch man replied the elder maybe he meant to be good to me but i got i awful tired having to go to church all the time and driving his auto for him and being held down i wish now i'd done what he told me to â€” i wouldn't be here the youths were locked up in the south clark street station both were weeping soon after the sal vation army filed in and began to sing hymn and the effect on the prisoners was such that the army was asked to stop j dr b b duncan a dextist by international news service detroit june 6 â€” dr banks b â– duncan is a prominent west side j dentist but did not answer his tele ] phone when the examiner corre i spondent here tried to reach him dock battalion is lloyd-george idea to end labor woe | skilled men may be enlisted in industrial army under orders of the state b international hem service london june 6 â€” at last i be lieve things are going all right i feel the machine beginning to move this statement lloyd - george made to-day at the new office of the ministry on munitions huge contracts already have been placed for high explosive shells but a tremendous amount of work is yet to be accom plished the state must have more direct control over labor and must be able to move bodies of skilled workers where they are most re quired lloyd-george was very much im pressed by the inspection at liver pool a dockers battalion there might be the solution of the great er problem in an extension of this scheme skilled men might be en listed and given uniforms in an in | dustrial army under the orders of i the state pavlowa and farrar will act in movies new york june 6 â€” anna pav lowa and geraldine farrar are both enlisted in the movies pavlowa and her whole russian ballet are to dance at the largest salaries ever paid for appearance in motion pictures it is announced and it is assumed that farrar's remuneration will be even greater pavlowa will stage the dumb girl of portici and farrar will appear in a series of photoplays sothern and marlowe to quit after benefit washington june 6 lt has been announced here that julia mar lowe and e h sothern will bid fare well to the stage when they appear in the lusitania benefit friday they have been living quietly in georgetown d c for some time sothern will read a remarkable let ter from charles frohman which reached him a few days after the lat ter perished women galled men's equals as soldiers by international x t ews service boston june 6 â€” dr dudley sar gent of harvard who has studied physical training for fifty years to day said women would make as good soldiers as men they are capable of marvellous endurance he added and on this score cannot be rated as ineligible for training for military service the weather Chicago and vicinity partly cloudy and cooler to-day i to-morrow fair moderate west erly windm to-day becoming va riable to-morrovt yesterday's temperatures highest 8s lowest 68 average 78 german ships sunk in naval battle allies win fight at the dardanelles u s note to kaiser ed up by wilson turks fall back along 3iileliiie general bombardment by fleet supports bayonet charges by the french and british london june 7 â€” according to a times dispatch from petro grad the naval engagement near the entrance of the gulf of riga resulted in the sinking of several german transports and one large vessel the name of which is un known the russians lost one auxiliary ship it is believed lil petrograd that further german - tempts to land troops will be mad aiiuna is in the eastern part of i turkey in asia on the eastern sho â– jof the tigris river it is about h j way between bagdad nnrf tltt persii t gulf anil some jiffy hiiles from the j persian border it lias n postoffii ' and is ii telegraph and missionary station london june 6 â€” the meat ditvi of the allies in the dardanelles hint ed at by winston spencer cburcblh in his speech at dundee is reported i in detail to-night in an official dla i patch from cairo as a result of a general attack or i dered by general sir lan hamilton along the southern end of gallipoll peninsula on friday morning tha ; french and british regular forces j assisted by the territorials and in ! dian troops advanced 500 yards on a j front of nearly three miles captur i ing two lines of turkish trenches and ; inflicting heavy losses on the turks the daily chronicle's corre ! spondent says in recent fighting in ! the gallipoli peninsula the turg j have lost 100,000 men in constan j tinople he declares there are at ! least 50,000 wounded soldiers and i he adds that a constant stream ot i injured is being brought from tha battliefleld into the capital j official report the report describing the opera ! tion in graphic detail follows on the night of thursday tho i turks having heavily bombarded a small fort at the front at the ex ; treme right of the french position ; which had just previously been cap ] tured by our allies launched an in ! fantry attack which was repulsed j with heavy loss to the enemy at the same the turks set fire to â– the scrub in front of the left cen j ter position occupied by a british i division ami attacked at that point : without success on friday morning sir lan ham ilton ordered a general attack on , the turkish trenches in the southern ; area of the gallipoli peninsula this j was preceded by a heavy bombard i ment from all our guns assisted by ' the battleships cruisers and destroy iers j attack with ha\o.\kt at a given signal our troops ruah ed forward with the bayonet and â€¢ were successful till lons tlie lfnu j except at one spot where tho he;i\y j wire entanglements had not been â€¢ destroyed by the bombardment the indian troops on our extreme i left made a magnificent advance and ; captured two lines of trenches bu | owing to the troops on their im i mediate right being hung up by i iv i wire entanglement they were jljlig'jl i to retire to their original line ! the regular division made good ! progress en the left center capturing ' a strony redoubt and the two lines of trenches beyond it advancing i about 50.0 yards 1 | the territorial division in tlie : i center advanced 600 yards and cap tured three lines of trenches thousli they held the enemy's rearmost ; trenches all day and half the enm j inc night â– they had to be ordered ! i back to the second captured line as â€¢ ' both their flanks wer exposed ' the naval division on our right . center captured a redoubt ad a formidable line ot trenchea in threo language in reply will berewqrded wilson to employ exact phrases j to express the views of this j country is washington belief wy international p\vm service washington june 6 secretary bryan late this afternoon announced i that president wilson's note to ger many would not be sent to-night this announcement by bryan fol lowed very clsely the return to the white house of president wilson who had been out in the country with | a party of friends the delay in sending the note is now well understood to be due to the desire of employing exact language and phrases to express the views of this country as there have been sev i eral important developments since it was announced a week ago that an uncompromising note would go for ward within forty-eight hours it is equally well understood that if it had been the intention of the | government to send at any time a note approaching the character of an j ultimatum there would be no diffi culty or delay in the selection of its phrases i expect friexdi.y reply the belief grows stronger every | moment that if the diplomatic door is left even half way open to ger many she will take advantage of it jto make a friendly reply american i i diplomats clearly understand that a j friendly reply means another com munication from this government in response to a friendly reply from | germany the rejoinder of germany naturally i is expected to be one in which she | will make an argument and give her j viewpoints as a reply to international j law obligations as understood by ; president wilson seeks freedom of seas it is noted by american officials that in germany's answer to the first note in which the clearing of the seas from mines was suggested ger j many in her answer indicated her i agreement with that proposition j similarly it is known by the previous | | notes of the president to germany j that he is aiming ultimately at the | freedom of the seas it is equally i well understood that this position of | the president will be maintained in any settlement for bringing about | peace in europe the common sentiment of the unit i ed states and germany on this funda i mental doctrine is said here to be an intimation at least that there is no desire on the part of either nation to provoke a conflict which would im pair the value of the united states as a most important factor in the ne gotiations for peace in europe it is announced that the german embassy has rented a summer home at cedarhurst l i vhis is taken here as an indication that amounts almost to a certainty that count von bernstorff has no expectation either of being ordered home or being hand ed his passports administration officials are becom ing restive and worried over the con stant publication in the press of the country of stories that large orders for ammunition and other war ma terials are being given and filled to be used against germany the ad ministration is being informed by german-americans that this informa tion is being disseminated in ger i many and is doing more to stir up feeling against the united states in germany than anything eles items ix contracts one of the stories which has stirred up american officials is that orders jor 1,000,000,000 worth of munitions j lire being rushed through in this < country it is alleged that the al lies have present contracts for sup j lilies with thirty-seven american i companies some of the items of j these contracts are five iniliiou howitzer and mhrap { oel shells for hiin.niii s 1 iÂ»,00o,oo0 ivorth of rifles for the britimli and he chinese eovernmentm all the small arms ammunition the ilem inprton i m c company enn turn mil so.ooo field suns for the brit sli arm from tlie n?Â«hlche:n steel l'oiiil'ntit this enmitany is ano ex l :<* tnmiitk r t 12-000 ahran ! net shrill and hm*qo Â»â€¢Â»:>" sheila i 1 every iuf | u s revokes passports of two americans ingermany by international news service berlin via london june 6 â€” the passports of two american citizens living at dresden leon raines and karl reck nagel have been ordered revoked by the american embassy on instructions from the state department at washington â– the men it is said adversely criticised the american gov ernment in the present crisis and declared in a newspaper article they were ashamed of their citizenship washington june 6 lt was explained to-night at the state department the passports of leon raines and karl reck nagel had been revoked because of their published attacks on the american government they were reported to have been the authors of circulars and pamphlets criticising the united states revocation of the passports makes it practically impossible for either raines or recknagel to return to the united states be fore the end of the war meantime they will be without protec tion usually given by this government to its subjects in foreign territory russ thrown ' back 25 hues austro-german advance toward lemberg continues lose at three points by international xcwb service london june 6 â€” driving the j russians out of one position after j another the austro-german advance | has now reached the region of mos | ciska on the road to lemberg since | the fall of przemysl the russians j have been driven back twenty-five miles berlin dispatches to-night as sert that it is not believed the rus sians will be able to hold the lines they have established there the ger mans and austrians attacking in j great force northeast and southeast i of the town the chain of lakes at grodek it j is believed by the berlin military j experts will be the next russian j stand here however the teutons ) are striking at the flank of the czar's i i forces as a part of this movement j i the army of general i.insingen has | captured a bridge head near zur | awno and is about to attempt a i i crossing of the dniester if this pas j | sage is effected the grodek line will i i be menaced to such an extent as to j intake it untenable for the russians i and their hold on lemberg would be i seriously threatened russ attack wings the russians are battling desper jately to relieve their center by vio i lent attacks on both wings of the i austiw-gernsen forces berlin and i | vienna report that these attempts ! jhave met with uniform failure but i petrograd tonight states they are i having their effect in retarding the i ; teutons , especial mention is made i of the russian offensive on the long j | river where the czar's right is i stated to have made an advance or : considerable proportions petro j grad also reports that the russians j i operating on the pruth have forced i a passage to the right bank of the river between delatyn and kolomea | and have held their ground despite ; violent counter attacks opposing this russian claim which ; is made officially unofficial advices j from vienna state that the russian ; forces northeast of czernowitz the capital of bukowina have been forced to retreat precipitately with the austrians in full pursuit 10,000 prisoners german dispatches continue to tell ' of large numbers of russians being taken prisoners in the operations ! of general linsingen's army on the dneister it is stated 10,900 additional captives have fallen into the hands of the teutons together with six can non and a number of machine guns { special to oueit examiner and lon don telegraph i'etrograd june 6 â€” so far the i occupation of f'rzemysl by tlie aus tro-germans has had no sequel the projecting wedge of which the torl roumania asks austrian land strong note set sunday as time ' limit parade for war in bucharest by international xeits service paris june c according to the geneva tribune bpnmania remitted | a note to austria on may 23 demand | ing territorial concessions and fixing june 6 as the time limit for a reply bulgaria is giving its support to the | note austria's ready to concede ; pieces of the varos valley a strip of ! bukowina and home rule for the j rest of transylvania under hun j garian dominion or one-eighth of ', the roumanian demands \ lo,ooo people ask mar bucharest june b a great ! j demonstration was held here to-day : ! in favor of intervention by roumania i i in the war in support of the entente i j allies about 30,000 persons marched j i in procession with flags flying and j â– bugles sounding to the italian lega i tion there speeches were delivered i i eulogizing italy for entering the war | in the afternoon partisans of alex ! ander marghiloman the const rvative ' leader together with socialists or i i ganized a counter demonstration ! big meeting to-day at a meeting of the executive com mittee of the conservative party the j majority condemned m marghilo | j man's leadership of the party he i | thereupon left the meeting a meet ing of the whole party has been called for to-morrow under the presi [ dency of jean lahovary who repre | j sents the wing of the party which is ' ! favorable to the allies roumania is going through i crisis ! similar to that experienced by italy i before the latter country entered the ! i war j kink's health halts rkkce salonika june 6 the entry of i : greece into the war on the side of j i the allies depends more on the state | i of the king's health than perhaps | j ainy other one factor only because ' i he is so universally beloved have the i | people endured his opposition to their | wish to enter the lists against ' turkey in any event they can now ] do nothing until after the election is ; held and if the king's condition j j seems very critical the emotional and . ! loyal greeks are very likely to re ' ! fuse to support venezelos in his de ! ] sire for war venezelos himself is loval to the i j king and holds him in close affec tion so that he would be loath to try ' to carry any measure to which the king is opposed if his royal master j were at the point of death as the i physicians can promise nothing the ! final action of greece is the merest guesswork athens june b an official bul i letin issued this morning says king ! constantine slept fitfully last night â€¢ his temperature was extremely high arid this was attributed to the reac ! tion following the operation for re ' moval of part ot the tenth rib his ; ronrlition is described as extremely critic;il and anxious crowds are sur i rounding the palace intinued on sth page 2d column i continued on 2ci page 1Â»t column 3 ej 3 tzd examiner's produce news part of our business."-henry martin & co y : "" " x3a3t n editor Chicago examiner Chicago Illinois dear slr i read fie cnlcaco examlner'every day because i find therein t columns of all of the morning papers in searcn of market and produce report . in the Chicago examiner a part of my buÂ«l"e^3 -

Chicago examiner vol xiii no 143 a m monday Chicago june 7 1915 monday registered h s patent offica ddt/t hmc rcmt in Chicago and ex.skwhkke rkich ulnfc ltfn 1 suburbs t w " cesw 7 drown in summer day accidents 2 at picnic two bodies washed ashore while j six persons barely escape in â– tragedies on lake and rivers canoe upsets in the desplaines at river grove and two men at co { lumbian knights outing sink three others almost lose lives trying to save companion un able to swim in calumet river Chicago enjoyed its first summer sunday yesterday thousands of persons sought the cooling breezes of the uike shore parks and suburban woods automobiles congested the boule vards the highest temperature was ss degrees at ~> p >Â»â– 6 night how ever a stiff wind had arisen cod ing the atmosphere six persons were drowned in boat ing accidents yesterday another either purposely or accidentally was plunged into the water and drowned the body of a man believed to have been drowned saturday night was washed up on the lake shore an other body was taken from calumet river at wentvvorth avenue six persons escaped with their lives after a desperate struggle in the water there were four accidents in all two o them on the lake one on desplainc-s river and another on cal umet river the dead philip karl jk twenÂ«>-iour years old o east forty-third street albert qiilter twenty years old east fifty-fifth street and in diana avenue charles a.ixzel o:to south hording avenue vixcext zajicek address un known william fricke osr west liigrh teenth street joseph vax wester 2 west one hundred and eleventh place three hen nnidentified two drown off 13th street karl and quilter were drowned j when their boat capsized in the lake j off the foot of thirteenth street | adam rice 4147 lake park avenue j also in the boat swam halt a mile j through the waves and was dragged j up on shore exhausted we were headed for lincoln park said rice when the boat be | pan to ship water karl was running the motor so quilter and i began | bailing out the water we were pre ; paring to rope ourselves to the boat j when a big wave upset it and we were thrown out karl's body was recovered by cap tain carland's life-saving crew later but that of quilter could not be fouind zajicek and ajnzel were drowned in the same accident on the des plaines river near river grove the men were attending a picnic given by the columbian knights with an other man anil a youth they were paddling a canoe when the craft swung around sidewise to ihe current and was upset marshal rescued two benjamin tomlinson marshal of river grove who saw the accident leaped into the water and rescued the boy and one of the mem zajicek and ajnzel sank and did not appear again their bodies were caught in an un dertaker's net across the river at wil low springs later three companions of joseph van westen attempted to save him and almost drowned themselves when their boat upset in the calumet river near kensington all but van wes ten could swim he sank and was carried down stream by the current oscar berquist 29 west one hun dred and ninth street joseph gray and oscar carlson who were rowing with van westen dove after him re fc^v)eatedly until they became exhausted i their cries for help brought several other persons who manned boats and i picked up the three swimmers van body was not recovered ' flicks was attempting to step from a pier inthe lake at tho foot of four \ ttenth streot into i boat when he k o v t bis balance ant fell into tlie election is to=day judges to be chosen to-day not to-morrow is election day polls open at 6 o'clock a m and close at 4 o'clock p m the voters will elect twenty circuit judges for cook county two superior court judges and a member of the supreme bench for Illinois from the seventh district all male voters eligible may vote for the judicial candidates voters who have moved since last registra tion may swear in their votes with a householder as a witness women may vote on the bond issues u of i student at 23 starts to war as a captain less than a year ago dougal | anthony kittermaster was a fresh man at the university of Illinois this week he will sail as the youngest captain in the third cana dian contingent to fight the ger mans somewhere in p'rance he is twenty-three years old captain kittermaster is a son of w a kittermaster of glencoe who has lived there for fifteen years but never has given up his cana dian citizenship the elder kitter master sent his son to canadian military training schools and soon after the war started the boy was ordered to canada he was a lieu tenant then in drilling recruits he showed such ability that he soon was pro moted to a captaincy when he sails for france he will be in com | mand of 1,500 men better than x-ray he calls invention by international xewk service new york june 6 â€” a wonderful improvement on the x-ray is claimed by charles h stanley an electro-therapeutist of this city he calls his discovery the stanley ray and declares among other things it is much more efficacious in the treatment of cancer than radium it is claimed any obstruction in the body is made visible in greater de tail than with the x-ray and the surgeon is able to remove it while it is still in view marconi invents gun to destroy airships by international xe service rome june 6 â€” according to a re port guglielmo marconi who ar rived here this morning has invented an anti-aircraft electrical gun whose projectile when within the area in fluenced by dirigibles or the pro peller of an aeroplanes will follow in the wake of the airship smashing the propeller signor marconi refuses to confirm or deny the report â€¢ comedian villa is very ill ily international xelvs service milan june fi â€” eduardo ferra villa the noted italian comedian is very ill here boys held in plottorrid blackstone arrested when pawning silver brushes and safety razors they confess to the police young men who say they are of good families admit they planned to rob the hotel two young men of good families who started out to make their way about the world by burglary were caught by detective sergeants wild and malloy last night just in time to prevent a raid on the blackstone hotel the police say the youths confessed they had planned to rob at least five rooms there and later sev eral rooms in the hotel sherman the detectives saw the young men pawning silver brushes and safety razors in south state street and be i gan to question them they gave un satisfactory answers where do you live demanded wild at the blackstone ' quit kiddin now and tell the truth come and see our rooms invited the prisoners had room at 1 a day the detectives went and surely enough under the names of w m hayger and c f hayger they had a j room at 5 a day and had eaten spanish melons hothouse grapes and other delicacies for breakfast under questioning by the detectives j ihe youths broke down and confessed i they had stolen the brushes and ra zors in saginaw and had planned j wholesale robberies here my name isn't hayger said the ! older about twenty-two i am g l duncan son of dr banker b duncan of detroit but don't let him know i i'm in jail " and don't let my mother know i i'm a thief " pleaded the other | she's in huntington w va my j name is benjamin duncan we are | not related my home is in colum i bus ohio got tired going to church what made you leave home asked the detectives oh my father's a sour old scotch man replied the elder maybe he meant to be good to me but i got i awful tired having to go to church all the time and driving his auto for him and being held down i wish now i'd done what he told me to â€” i wouldn't be here the youths were locked up in the south clark street station both were weeping soon after the sal vation army filed in and began to sing hymn and the effect on the prisoners was such that the army was asked to stop j dr b b duncan a dextist by international news service detroit june 6 â€” dr banks b â– duncan is a prominent west side j dentist but did not answer his tele ] phone when the examiner corre i spondent here tried to reach him dock battalion is lloyd-george idea to end labor woe | skilled men may be enlisted in industrial army under orders of the state b international hem service london june 6 â€” at last i be lieve things are going all right i feel the machine beginning to move this statement lloyd - george made to-day at the new office of the ministry on munitions huge contracts already have been placed for high explosive shells but a tremendous amount of work is yet to be accom plished the state must have more direct control over labor and must be able to move bodies of skilled workers where they are most re quired lloyd-george was very much im pressed by the inspection at liver pool a dockers battalion there might be the solution of the great er problem in an extension of this scheme skilled men might be en listed and given uniforms in an in | dustrial army under the orders of i the state pavlowa and farrar will act in movies new york june 6 â€” anna pav lowa and geraldine farrar are both enlisted in the movies pavlowa and her whole russian ballet are to dance at the largest salaries ever paid for appearance in motion pictures it is announced and it is assumed that farrar's remuneration will be even greater pavlowa will stage the dumb girl of portici and farrar will appear in a series of photoplays sothern and marlowe to quit after benefit washington june 6 lt has been announced here that julia mar lowe and e h sothern will bid fare well to the stage when they appear in the lusitania benefit friday they have been living quietly in georgetown d c for some time sothern will read a remarkable let ter from charles frohman which reached him a few days after the lat ter perished women galled men's equals as soldiers by international x t ews service boston june 6 â€” dr dudley sar gent of harvard who has studied physical training for fifty years to day said women would make as good soldiers as men they are capable of marvellous endurance he added and on this score cannot be rated as ineligible for training for military service the weather Chicago and vicinity partly cloudy and cooler to-day i to-morrow fair moderate west erly windm to-day becoming va riable to-morrovt yesterday's temperatures highest 8s lowest 68 average 78 german ships sunk in naval battle allies win fight at the dardanelles u s note to kaiser ed up by wilson turks fall back along 3iileliiie general bombardment by fleet supports bayonet charges by the french and british london june 7 â€” according to a times dispatch from petro grad the naval engagement near the entrance of the gulf of riga resulted in the sinking of several german transports and one large vessel the name of which is un known the russians lost one auxiliary ship it is believed lil petrograd that further german - tempts to land troops will be mad aiiuna is in the eastern part of i turkey in asia on the eastern sho â– jof the tigris river it is about h j way between bagdad nnrf tltt persii t gulf anil some jiffy hiiles from the j persian border it lias n postoffii ' and is ii telegraph and missionary station london june 6 â€” the meat ditvi of the allies in the dardanelles hint ed at by winston spencer cburcblh in his speech at dundee is reported i in detail to-night in an official dla i patch from cairo as a result of a general attack or i dered by general sir lan hamilton along the southern end of gallipoll peninsula on friday morning tha ; french and british regular forces j assisted by the territorials and in ! dian troops advanced 500 yards on a j front of nearly three miles captur i ing two lines of turkish trenches and ; inflicting heavy losses on the turks the daily chronicle's corre ! spondent says in recent fighting in ! the gallipoli peninsula the turg j have lost 100,000 men in constan j tinople he declares there are at ! least 50,000 wounded soldiers and i he adds that a constant stream ot i injured is being brought from tha battliefleld into the capital j official report the report describing the opera ! tion in graphic detail follows on the night of thursday tho i turks having heavily bombarded a small fort at the front at the ex ; treme right of the french position ; which had just previously been cap ] tured by our allies launched an in ! fantry attack which was repulsed j with heavy loss to the enemy at the same the turks set fire to â– the scrub in front of the left cen j ter position occupied by a british i division ami attacked at that point : without success on friday morning sir lan ham ilton ordered a general attack on , the turkish trenches in the southern ; area of the gallipoli peninsula this j was preceded by a heavy bombard i ment from all our guns assisted by ' the battleships cruisers and destroy iers j attack with ha\o.\kt at a given signal our troops ruah ed forward with the bayonet and â€¢ were successful till lons tlie lfnu j except at one spot where tho he;i\y j wire entanglements had not been â€¢ destroyed by the bombardment the indian troops on our extreme i left made a magnificent advance and ; captured two lines of trenches bu | owing to the troops on their im i mediate right being hung up by i iv i wire entanglement they were jljlig'jl i to retire to their original line ! the regular division made good ! progress en the left center capturing ' a strony redoubt and the two lines of trenches beyond it advancing i about 50.0 yards 1 | the territorial division in tlie : i center advanced 600 yards and cap tured three lines of trenches thousli they held the enemy's rearmost ; trenches all day and half the enm j inc night â– they had to be ordered ! i back to the second captured line as â€¢ ' both their flanks wer exposed ' the naval division on our right . center captured a redoubt ad a formidable line ot trenchea in threo language in reply will berewqrded wilson to employ exact phrases j to express the views of this j country is washington belief wy international p\vm service washington june 6 secretary bryan late this afternoon announced i that president wilson's note to ger many would not be sent to-night this announcement by bryan fol lowed very clsely the return to the white house of president wilson who had been out in the country with | a party of friends the delay in sending the note is now well understood to be due to the desire of employing exact language and phrases to express the views of this country as there have been sev i eral important developments since it was announced a week ago that an uncompromising note would go for ward within forty-eight hours it is equally well understood that if it had been the intention of the | government to send at any time a note approaching the character of an j ultimatum there would be no diffi culty or delay in the selection of its phrases i expect friexdi.y reply the belief grows stronger every | moment that if the diplomatic door is left even half way open to ger many she will take advantage of it jto make a friendly reply american i i diplomats clearly understand that a j friendly reply means another com munication from this government in response to a friendly reply from | germany the rejoinder of germany naturally i is expected to be one in which she | will make an argument and give her j viewpoints as a reply to international j law obligations as understood by ; president wilson seeks freedom of seas it is noted by american officials that in germany's answer to the first note in which the clearing of the seas from mines was suggested ger j many in her answer indicated her i agreement with that proposition j similarly it is known by the previous | | notes of the president to germany j that he is aiming ultimately at the | freedom of the seas it is equally i well understood that this position of | the president will be maintained in any settlement for bringing about | peace in europe the common sentiment of the unit i ed states and germany on this funda i mental doctrine is said here to be an intimation at least that there is no desire on the part of either nation to provoke a conflict which would im pair the value of the united states as a most important factor in the ne gotiations for peace in europe it is announced that the german embassy has rented a summer home at cedarhurst l i vhis is taken here as an indication that amounts almost to a certainty that count von bernstorff has no expectation either of being ordered home or being hand ed his passports administration officials are becom ing restive and worried over the con stant publication in the press of the country of stories that large orders for ammunition and other war ma terials are being given and filled to be used against germany the ad ministration is being informed by german-americans that this informa tion is being disseminated in ger i many and is doing more to stir up feeling against the united states in germany than anything eles items ix contracts one of the stories which has stirred up american officials is that orders jor 1,000,000,000 worth of munitions j lire being rushed through in this < country it is alleged that the al lies have present contracts for sup j lilies with thirty-seven american i companies some of the items of j these contracts are five iniliiou howitzer and mhrap { oel shells for hiin.niii s 1 iÂ»,00o,oo0 ivorth of rifles for the britimli and he chinese eovernmentm all the small arms ammunition the ilem inprton i m c company enn turn mil so.ooo field suns for the brit sli arm from tlie n?Â«hlche:n steel l'oiiil'ntit this enmitany is ano ex l :" sheila i 1 every iuf | u s revokes passports of two americans ingermany by international news service berlin via london june 6 â€” the passports of two american citizens living at dresden leon raines and karl reck nagel have been ordered revoked by the american embassy on instructions from the state department at washington â– the men it is said adversely criticised the american gov ernment in the present crisis and declared in a newspaper article they were ashamed of their citizenship washington june 6 lt was explained to-night at the state department the passports of leon raines and karl reck nagel had been revoked because of their published attacks on the american government they were reported to have been the authors of circulars and pamphlets criticising the united states revocation of the passports makes it practically impossible for either raines or recknagel to return to the united states be fore the end of the war meantime they will be without protec tion usually given by this government to its subjects in foreign territory russ thrown ' back 25 hues austro-german advance toward lemberg continues lose at three points by international xcwb service london june 6 â€” driving the j russians out of one position after j another the austro-german advance | has now reached the region of mos | ciska on the road to lemberg since | the fall of przemysl the russians j have been driven back twenty-five miles berlin dispatches to-night as sert that it is not believed the rus sians will be able to hold the lines they have established there the ger mans and austrians attacking in j great force northeast and southeast i of the town the chain of lakes at grodek it j is believed by the berlin military j experts will be the next russian j stand here however the teutons ) are striking at the flank of the czar's i i forces as a part of this movement j i the army of general i.insingen has | captured a bridge head near zur | awno and is about to attempt a i i crossing of the dniester if this pas j | sage is effected the grodek line will i i be menaced to such an extent as to j intake it untenable for the russians i and their hold on lemberg would be i seriously threatened russ attack wings the russians are battling desper jately to relieve their center by vio i lent attacks on both wings of the i austiw-gernsen forces berlin and i | vienna report that these attempts ! jhave met with uniform failure but i petrograd tonight states they are i having their effect in retarding the i ; teutons , especial mention is made i of the russian offensive on the long j | river where the czar's right is i stated to have made an advance or : considerable proportions petro j grad also reports that the russians j i operating on the pruth have forced i a passage to the right bank of the river between delatyn and kolomea | and have held their ground despite ; violent counter attacks opposing this russian claim which ; is made officially unofficial advices j from vienna state that the russian ; forces northeast of czernowitz the capital of bukowina have been forced to retreat precipitately with the austrians in full pursuit 10,000 prisoners german dispatches continue to tell ' of large numbers of russians being taken prisoners in the operations ! of general linsingen's army on the dneister it is stated 10,900 additional captives have fallen into the hands of the teutons together with six can non and a number of machine guns { special to oueit examiner and lon don telegraph i'etrograd june 6 â€” so far the i occupation of f'rzemysl by tlie aus tro-germans has had no sequel the projecting wedge of which the torl roumania asks austrian land strong note set sunday as time ' limit parade for war in bucharest by international xeits service paris june c according to the geneva tribune bpnmania remitted | a note to austria on may 23 demand | ing territorial concessions and fixing june 6 as the time limit for a reply bulgaria is giving its support to the | note austria's ready to concede ; pieces of the varos valley a strip of ! bukowina and home rule for the j rest of transylvania under hun j garian dominion or one-eighth of ', the roumanian demands \ lo,ooo people ask mar bucharest june b a great ! j demonstration was held here to-day : ! in favor of intervention by roumania i i in the war in support of the entente i j allies about 30,000 persons marched j i in procession with flags flying and j â– bugles sounding to the italian lega i tion there speeches were delivered i i eulogizing italy for entering the war | in the afternoon partisans of alex ! ander marghiloman the const rvative ' leader together with socialists or i i ganized a counter demonstration ! big meeting to-day at a meeting of the executive com mittee of the conservative party the j majority condemned m marghilo | j man's leadership of the party he i | thereupon left the meeting a meet ing of the whole party has been called for to-morrow under the presi [ dency of jean lahovary who repre | j sents the wing of the party which is ' ! favorable to the allies roumania is going through i crisis ! similar to that experienced by italy i before the latter country entered the ! i war j kink's health halts rkkce salonika june 6 the entry of i : greece into the war on the side of j i the allies depends more on the state | i of the king's health than perhaps | j ainy other one factor only because ' i he is so universally beloved have the i | people endured his opposition to their | wish to enter the lists against ' turkey in any event they can now ] do nothing until after the election is ; held and if the king's condition j j seems very critical the emotional and . ! loyal greeks are very likely to re ' ! fuse to support venezelos in his de ! ] sire for war venezelos himself is loval to the i j king and holds him in close affec tion so that he would be loath to try ' to carry any measure to which the king is opposed if his royal master j were at the point of death as the i physicians can promise nothing the ! final action of greece is the merest guesswork athens june b an official bul i letin issued this morning says king ! constantine slept fitfully last night â€¢ his temperature was extremely high arid this was attributed to the reac ! tion following the operation for re ' moval of part ot the tenth rib his ; ronrlition is described as extremely critic;il and anxious crowds are sur i rounding the palace intinued on sth page 2d column i continued on 2ci page 1Â»t column 3 ej 3 tzd examiner's produce news part of our business."-henry martin & co y : "" " x3a3t n editor Chicago examiner Chicago Illinois dear slr i read fie cnlcaco examlner'every day because i find therein t columns of all of the morning papers in searcn of market and produce report . in the Chicago examiner a part of my buÂ«l"e^3 -